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As an antidote to our long-running squabbles about vernacular names, here are some infinitely more inspiring candidates from George Armistead on the ABA Blog: THE TOP 10: Best Colloquial Bird Names.
"7. Nine-killer
This name and butcherbird are used at times for both of our shrikes, but nine-killer seems more often associated with Northern Shrike. Their gruesome habit of impaling their prey (e.g. songbirds, rodents, and large insects) on thorns and barbed wire led some observers to say that they’d kill nine animals before eating just one."
as the German name for Lanius collurio is Neuntöter. I wonder if the name was brought to North America by German immigrants?
Edward, also this from Francesca Greenoak 1997 (British Birds: their Folklore, Names and Literature)...
There is a superstition recorded by both Turner (1544) and Willughby (1678) that the Red-backed Shrike kills nine creatures before it even begins to feed. The name Nine Killer comes from the German Neunmoder.
A new "colloquial" name that I hear occasionally is ""Parking Lot Bird" for Brewer's Blackbird
Of the old timers--now long defunct I imagine--I've always liked "Fly-up-the-crick" (Green Heron) as that's how I saw my first one many years ago, chasing it up the "crick" for a quarter mile before I got the necessary killer look for my life list. A red letter day!
Richard,
I seem to remember that Thomas Bewick bemoaned the number of colloquial names while trying to catalogue his engravings, and so there is a long and honourable history of confusing the pedants and the tidyfiers.
Also, Robert Burns' song, " I have heard the Mavis singing/his love song from above...", the tune being exquisite yet not easy to sing unless you have a decent range.
MJB
Also, Robert Burns' song, " I have heard the Mavis singing/his love song from above...", the tune being exquisite yet not easy to sing unless you have a decent range.
MJB
The clue was in Burns' words, wasn't it?
MJB
PS When on a bird survey in Turkey, my Turkish colleague told me that the local area name for Calandra Lark was, most appropriately, translateable as 'Heaven-singer'. When the whole sky was filled with Calandra song, then the Skylark's was a mere apprentice-piece; the Calandra chorus was spellbinding.
Irving Berlin's "And my heart beats so that I can hardly speak" is an apt description of such a moment, yet people still ask, 'What on earth do you get out of birding?'
MJB